Basics
They were holding $1bn in stock? Are u kidding?
Against an existing user base of 80 million people. When and why did they suddenly think they could double their handset sales between one financial year and another.
Research in Motion saw its shares continue the climb that began earlier this week after it posted a Q2 earnings report that beat analyst expectations, but the struggling BlackBerry maker's revenue disappointed once again and its losses continue. On Wednesday, RIM's stock price was buoyed by optimism about its upcoming …
Frankly, my Bold 9000 suffered problems and the customer care of RIM was basically utterly low end. There isn't any other word for their ability to serve me as a customer.
So, after going through that, I went Android. And boy, that wasn't as good for my productivity when it comes to texting and writing content on the phone. So, there is a definitive advantage to all of their shortcuts and stuff for the power user.
If they do get their act together, like merge Android with their expertise on keyboards and productivity, I'll all be back in with them. Now, we have WhatsApp that covers much of what BBM has to offer. And it works nicely on even a super cheap phone.
Let's have RIM give us value for money and we may be back with them. Not sure the dismal failure of the Playbook (that heavy little brick) and the bad customer service will help in getting there in any way.
I have a Galaxy S II. The shitty Samsung email client doesn't show me all the emails that Outlook actually has in its inbox when connected to an Exchange server. The calendar app whilst is very clever at aggregating any data source I throw at it, messes up recurring appointments and the reminder/notification feature is shit.
Email is also slow and inefficient use of the screen's real estate and you can't customise it.
I, for one, can't wait for my contract to end so I can get rid of this and get a Blackberry again.
Also I like the way that I can put in autotext shortcuts and things like typing "il" change to "I'll" without any user interaction. Very smart.
FAO RIM: Facebook on Blackberry is nowhere near as advanced as its counterparts. Add video upload and things like that and it'd make a lot of Blackberry owners resent the device less.
I have a Playbook and 2.0 and I don't think much of the email client. It's not broken by any stretch but it does feel a bit clumsy, especially its unhelpful and somewhat annoying new mail notifications, and when you need to flag a bunch of emails at once for some action. It doesn't rotate either into portrait mode although 2.1 is supposed to fix that when it finally appears.
So far the most productive email client I've used is the GMail one for android. I haven't tried the generic mail client and I could well see it as being pretty basic.
Exactly. They cannot compete with Samsung. Whereas they can almost certainly survive as the go-to supplier for business devices for mobile users who need proper security. And, if they get it right, for IT professionals who want their little personal marketing box to say "I am a serious person who is more concerned with answering support emails than playing Angry Birds."
The "leaked" BB10 information suggests that it is going to be very good indeed for heavy messaging. The idea that whatever foreground application you are running can be slid to one side to view the current alerts and notifications underneath while still running unaffected is excellent. And a square screen for the keyboard version makes obvious sense. The user/business environment switch is a good idea especially if it can be made to happen automatically in secure environments (so that in the trading room the camera and voice recording is switched off, for instance).
Running Android or Windows Phone on a traditional BB was never going to make sense. Tight integration of the hardware design and the OS has worked well for Apple. RIM have to try to pull off the same trick, but in a different market sector.
It's nice to know they aren't going to abandon OS7 when BB10 launches.
From the reviews I have been reading for the iphone 5 Apple's lead is narrowing. Nokia is hanging in at the bottom segment of the market to. They just need to hang in their till they get the right product out (and it becomes fashionable to knock another company). Plus a lot of professional market watchers care only about the US market. Don't underestimate the long term importance of growing in emerging markets.
"There's nothing wrong with Windows Phone 7"
Does not support native compiled code for the processor architecture
Does not have multitasking
Does not allow browser engines other than IE
Does not support OpenGL thereby limiting its usefulness for cross platform games
MS have too many limits upon the manufacturers (for example, 800x480 is the maximum screen resolution)
I can continue if you like?
If you can't admit to a platforms limitations and failings, then how can you ever expect it to improve?
$235m losses in this quarter... a little over $2b in cash. If we exclude the last quarter's half billion dollar loss as an exceptional result and use the $235m loss as a running average...
...add in higher investment to launch, advertise, and produce hardware for a new platform in a croweded smartphone market... then I figure...
2014 will be an interesting year for RIM.
If there is a share bubble rise at the launch of RIM 10 I would suggest to those of you who still own any RIM stock to sell and eat the loss.
Some of the vids for BB 10 look really cool. It does look very intuitive and easy to use and some stuff like business / user modes would be appealing.
The burning issue though is app support. Without the apps it doesn't matter how damned good the phone is. People like their apps and if they're not there then sales will suffer.
From the reviews I have been reading for the iphone 5 Apple's lead is narrowing. Nokia is hanging in at the bottom segment of the market to. They just need to hang in their till they get the right product out
Surely you me4an bottom segment of market too & hang on in there.
Sheesh, & I though the Reg Hacks were bad at this stuff.
My corp, like many others I suspect, go for the cheap as chips BBs for their hordes. This creates an image problem.
Mine doesn't even do 3G ffs. Which means I can't use the Voda femto cell in my house. Which means the BB is useless as a phone in my network black spot home.
And the "camera" is so bad you can't even snap e.g. white boards for posterity. Well, you can snap, but you won't be able to read it later.
The browser, always a BB Achilles' heel, is made worse by the aforementioned lack of 3G.
At least the email is a strength eh? Well no. The exchange synching screws up just when you need it.
It is light though, so slightly less annoying to carry around.